Categories: Highway Traffic Act, Speeding, Stunting and Racing

Pages: 1 2 3 4 >>

09/29/10

Permalink 09:23:40 am, by In The News Email , 428 words
Categories: In The News, Highway Traffic Act

Texting while driving bans don't work, may actually hurt, study finds

Link: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/092810-texting-bans-dont-work.html

As more states ban the practice – Massachusetts will become the 31st to do so on Thursday – new research from the insurance industry claims that the prohibition of texting while driving does not reduce auto crashes … and may actually increase them.

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09/10/09

Permalink 05:12:16 pm, by In The News Email , 394 words
Categories: In The News, Ontario, Speeding

TORONTO -- How slow should you go?

Link: http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2009/09/10/10815536-sun.html

TORONTO -- How slow should you go?

A Toronto city councillor is proposing that all of the city's posted speed limits be reduced by 10 km/h with a bottom limit of 30 km/h.

Bill Saundercook intends to put his idea before the next meeting of the City Hall's pedestrian committee.

"When you start seeing the (pedestrian) fatalities across Toronto, and you start studying where they're occurring, then you're going to see in the suburbs of Toronto ... where we have posted 60 km/h speed limits and in some places even as much as 70, that whenever there's an accident in those areas, it's usually a fatality," he said yesterday.

"You don't want people to say, 'I'm not going to walk because it's too risky.' "

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Permalink 10:01:41 am, by Serhiy Senatorov, 618 words
Categories: In The News, Speeding, Stunting and Racing

Ontario stunt-driving law unconstitutional

Written By
Serhiy Senatorov
TRAFFIC LAW Paralegal Services
Licensed Paralegal

Natalie Alcoba, National Post
Published: Wednesday, September 09, 2009

An Ontario judge has ruled that a section of the province's stunt driving law is unconstitutional because it exposes an extreme speeder to a possible jail term, without any ability to defend against it.

The law applies to anyone driving 50 kilometres per hour above the speed limit.

In a ruling delivered Friday in a Napanee courthouse, Justice Geoffrey J. Griffin said someone who is speeding that much cannot advance a "due diligence" defence, and is therefore exposed to a jail term that contravenes the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

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09/09/09

Permalink 01:53:44 pm, by Gary Parker, 188 words
Categories: In The News, Highway Traffic Act, Speeding, Stunting and Racing

Street-Racing Law Ruled Unconstitutional, OPP Will Continue To Lay Charges

2009/09/09 | CityNews.ca Staff

A newly enacted provincial law that targets dangerous drivers has been ruled unconstitutional.

Ontario’s street racing and stunt driving legislation carries a possible prison sentence, but gives the accused limited grounds for defence, a Napanee judge found.

Ontario Court of Justice Judge G J Griffin made the decision Friday.

However, that doesn’t mean cops will stop handing out tickets.

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08/06/09

Permalink 10:19:15 am, by Gary Parker, 912 words
Categories: Ontario, Highway Traffic Act, Speeding, Stunting and Racing

What to Do When You Are Pulled Over by the Police

Link: http://www.savemylicense.ca/what_to_do_if_pulled.html

What to Do When You Are Pulled Over by the Police
Learn what to say and what not to say and when vehicle searches are legal.

Your battle to beat a ticket begins the instant you realize you're being stopped by a police officer. You will be in a much better position to challenge your ticket in court if you take a few simple steps when you are pulled over. Here are some suggestions.

1. When You See the Police Car
If a police car is following you with its siren blaring or emergency lights flashing, pull over to the right safely and quickly. Use your turn signal to indicate any lane changes from left to right, and slow down fairly quickly, but not so quickly that the officer will have to brake to avoid hitting you. Pull over as far to the right as possible so that, when the officer comes up to your widow, he won't have to worry about being clipped by vehicles in the right lane.

By stopping as soon as you can, you'll have a better chance of figuring out exactly where the officer says you committed a violation. You may want to return to that area later to make sure the officer was telling the truth about how he judged your speed, saw your turn, or witnessed any other violation.

2. Right After You Stop

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